So, I'm looking to build a 5 color land hate deck with Ramos, Dragon Engine . I'm looking for prison cards like Norn's Annex and Propaganda . Any land theft or land destruction cards like Pillage ; both aimed at my opponents, and if possible maybe some landfall triggers for me.
The guys and gals at my LGS are kind of competitive for no reason, and I dont really have a deck to keep up with all of their infinte combos. So I'm just looking for a good solid land destruction deck to slow them down for me to secure a win.
You're going to have to run a lot of symmetrical effects (hit all players) and then run cards to get around them yourself. In a 4 player pod, if you 1 for 1 trade cards from hand for opponents lands, you're going to be really far behind. You start with 7 cards, while your opponents collectively have 21 cards. 1 for 1 trades are not the way to go about building this deck.
Next, some cards that destroy lands or hate on lands. Armageddon Boil Choke Flashfires Acid Rain Ravages of War Destructive Force Contamination Blood Moon Magus of the Moon Tsabo's Web Omen of Fire Strip Mine Wasteland Impending Disaster Tectonic Break Ruination Wildfire
Then we run some cards that let us recur lands, or like when lands break Ramunap Excavator Crucible of Worlds Life from the Loam Terravore The Gitrog Monster Titania, Protector of Argoth Splendid Reclamation
If it is 5 colour you want fetch lands and shock lands so that any fetch can get any shock. even if you are playing the slow fetches. these also tie in with land recursion like dingusdingo recomended.
yes, symmetrical effects are best like the ones mentioned I also like cycling Decree of Annihilation as it is harder to counter. Mana rocks and mana dorks can be a huge problem if they get them down before you destroy their lands. It is also a way to get a mana advantage, for example Daretti, Scrap Savant stacks looks to get ahead of mana in artifact then limit their lands in one of many ways whilst also chumping out big things with darreti.
Living Plane and Nature's Revolt make for some juicy combos with Cursed Totem or Linvala, Keeper of Silence to stop all land/creature based mana production and they combo with Toxic Deluge or any other small board wipe to kill all lands and Elesh Norn, Grand Cenobite to kill opponent's lands and make yours some beefy bois.
So I don't want cards like Thousand-Year Storm and Ral, Storm Conduit ?? Interesting I thought that was going to be the main way to destroy lands. This deck is seeming alot more obtainable than I originally thought in terms of pretty affordable cards. Thank you all very much.
This is my first 5 color deck, so I'm a little worried about having enough mana, and counter spells. Speaking of counter spells I have about 7 put aside is that to much?? They are between 2-3 cmc range. I do have a Mana Drain and Flusterstorm .
they are probably a bit too cmc intensive. As you do not want to be running "destroy target land" spells then copying them because that is going to leave a different opponent ahead, as discussed earlier.
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Conflicts were unleashed by a series of sweeping changes: the forced "removal" of the Creeks from their homeland to Oklahoma in the 1830s, the transformation of the Creeks' enslaved black population into landed black Creek citizens after the Civil War, the imposition of statehood and private landownership at the turn of the twentieth century, and the entrenchment of a sharecropping economy and white supremacy in the following decades. In struggles over land, wealth, and power, Oklahomans actively defined and redefined what it meant to be Native American, African American, or white. By telling this story, David Chang contributes to the history of racial construction and nationalism as well as to southern, western, and Native American history. About the Author David A. Chang is assistant professor of history at the University of Minnesota.
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Alright cardboard warriors I need some help. In all the multicolor decks I've ever made, when it comes to deciding how much of each color land to put in I have somewhat of a method, but then eventually throw it to a guess. I usually count up the color symbols of each of my non land cards and put it to a ratio, then add nonbasics that fit into my general and kinda guess where my color ratio fill lies. Then I add basics to suit that ratio. But every time I do this I get frustrated because I feel there must be a better method to figuring this out. Does anyone have a seemingly foolproof method of deciding how to match lands to non land color requirements or even better, an equation of some kind? I'm looking to step up my game but I feel this is an area where I'm lacking.
There have been quite a good set of lands released in recent memory, from the Bondlands, to the slow lands released in the Innistrad sets (the enemy pairs are finally eating now). I play in a pod where we don't really do mass land destruction (a little casual, mostly targeted for stuff like [[Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx]], [[Emeria, the Sky Ruin]], [[Glacial Chasm]]), and I hate playing multiple colours with lands that usually enter tapped. So this is usually the setup averaged across my current 3 colour decks.
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We fully support efforts that focus on Black farmers, like the Detroit and Washtenaw BlackFarmer Land Funds. We decided to open our movement up to all farmers of color, because of thepopulation dynamics and demographics in our region. While supporting as many farmers of color aspossible, we still aim to center Black aspiring farmers in this work. You can read more aboutthe history of Black farmers in the United State and disenfranchisement inthis article from The Atlantic.
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